What medications to take for high triglycerides depends on the patient’s high triglyceride level, clinical symptoms and combined underlying diseases. If the patient only has mild elevated triglycerides and no obvious clinical symptoms, he can temporarily not take lipid-lowering drugs. It is recommended that the patient actively change his lifestyle, usually low salt and low fat diet, eat more fresh vegetables and fruits, control weight, strengthen physical exercise, quit smoking and alcohol, live a regular life, combine work and rest, and keep a relaxed mood. If the patient’s triglycerides are moderately elevated, it is recommended that patients prefer fibrates, such as fenofibrate, benzofibrate and gemfibrozil, which have the strongest triglyceride-lowering effects; in addition, niacin lipid regulators such as inositol nicotinate and acipimox have clear triglyceride-lowering effects; studies have shown that n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (such as deep-sea fish oil, etc.) can also lower triglycerides; traditional Chinese medicine such as turmeric, hawthorn and Chinese herbs such as turmeric, hawthorn, lotus leaf, etc. can also lower triglycerides. If patients with elevated triglycerides are combined with coronary heart disease, cerebral infarction and other cardiovascular diseases, statins such as atorvastatin, resulvastatin, simvastatin, pitavastatin and other drugs should be preferred, which can lower lipids and at the same time resist atherosclerosis and prevent the recurrence of cardiovascular diseases. While taking the drugs, pay attention to review the liver and kidney function to avoid drug accumulation or adverse reactions.